Claire, Elias, and Lili are the 2023-24 peer research advisors!
Make an appointment with Elias.
Make an appointment with Lili.
Make an appointment with Claire.
Welcome to the course guide for Prof. Anderson-Connolly's SSI1-161 Social Order & Human Freedom. This guide will help you identify library resources and services to help you with your Seminar in Scholarly Inquiry class.
Scholarly sources present sophisticated, researched arguments using both primary and secondary sources and are written by experts. Journals are examples of scholarly sources.
Popular sources aim to inform or entertain and are intended for a general, non-specialized audience. In academic writing, popular sources most often are analyzed as primary sources. Magazines are examples of popular sources.
To determine the difference between these two types of sources, ask yourself:
For your research assignments, professors may request that you use different types of sources, including primary, secondary, and tertiary sources.
Primary sources are the raw materials of research. They provide firsthand access to words, images, or objects created directly by the persons involved in the activity or event. The value of primary sources is that they allow the researcher to get as close as possible to the original work. It is important to note that the types of information that can be considered primary sources may vary depending on the subject discipline, and also on how you are using the material. Time is also a defining element.
Primary Source Examples: works of art, music, fiction or poetry, statistics, original scientific research, letters, diaries, and interviews.
Secondary sources discuss, report on, or provide commentary about primary sources. They are important to researchers as they offer an interpretation of information gathered from primary sources.
Secondary Source Examples: journal, magazine & newspaper articles, biographies, monographs.
Tertiary sources present summaries, condense, or collect information from primary and/or secondary sources. They can be a good place to look up facts, get a general overview of a subject, or locate primary and secondary sources.
Tertiary Source Examples: encyclopedias, dictionaries, textbooks, handbooks, timelines, bibliographies.
The CAARP Test
The CAARP Test is a list of questions to help you evaluate the information you find. Different criteria will be more or less important depending on your situation or need. Many of these questions can be applied to books, journal articles, news stories and/or web sites.
Currency: the timeliness of the information
Authority: the source of the information
Accuracy: the reliability, truthfulness or plausibility of the information
Relevance: the importance of the information for your needs
Purpose: the reason the information exists
Adapted from CSU Chico